Yet another report with many storylines about the Lincoln Project has hit the Internet. The most explosive part is the founders knowing about John Weaver’s alleged predatory behavior much earlier than was previously reported.
They soldiered on with him anyway, including offering him a partnership in a new media venture just before the 2020 election.
Prior reports on senior Lincoln Project leaders’ knowledge of the allegations against Weaver put the dates between March 2020 and June 2020. The new information from the New York Times moves the timeline up six months to January 2020.
The New York Times reports:
Allegations about Mr. Weaver’s conduct began appearing in published reports in The American Conservative and Forensic News this winter. In late January, The New York Times reported on allegations going back several years. The Times has spoken to more than 25 people who received harassing messages, including one person who was 14 when Mr. Weaver first contacted him.Fresh reporting by The Times found that Mr. Weaver’s inappropriate behavior was brought to the organization’s attention multiple times last year, beginning in January 2020, according to four people with direct knowledge of the complaints, though none of the warnings involved a minor. The Lincoln Project’s spokeswoman, Ryan Wiggins, said it would not comment on issues related to Mr. Weaver while an outside legal review of Mr. Weaver’s actions was ongoing. The group has hired the law firm Paul Hastings to conduct the review.
Also contained in the Times’ report is how Weaver was approached by three of the Lincoln Project’s other co-founders, including Rick Wilson, before the election about starting a new media enterprise. They went to Weaver even though by this point an internal investigation had been launched by the Lincoln Project into Weaver’s alleged behavior:
Lincoln Project co-founder Steve Schmidt pitched a joint media venture with John Weaver as an equal partner months after allegations of Weaver’s predatory online conduct had come to the organization’s attention, according to a new report.The New York Times reported Monday that Schmidt, Weaver and fellow co-founders Rick Wilson and Reed Galen sought to transform their anti-Trump super PAC into a massive media organization. They pitched the idea shortly before the November election.By this point, however, Weaver’s penchant for harassing dozens of men online with inappropriate comments and offers to trade sex for employment was known to the group’s higher-ups, according to reporting by Fox News and multiple other outlets.
The paper also noted that Schmidt, Weaver, Wilson, and Galen’s grifting potential was evident right from the start. “Shortly after they created the group in late 2019, they had agreed to pay themselves millions of dollars in management fees, three people with knowledge of the deal said,” according to the Times’ report.
George Conway, who is one of the more prominent founders of the group, has done his best over the last month to distance himself since reports of Weaver allegations and how much of Lincoln Project’s millions in donations from Democratic billionaires remains unaccounted for:
While Conway and others who had leadership roles in the formation of the Lincoln Project continue their tap-dances away from it, let’s pause for a moment to refresh memories on how and why a group that was slimy and duplicitous from the start was allowed to flourish:
Is it just merely a coincidence that we’re learning much more from the media about the Lincoln Project’s darker side after the presidential election? I think not:
That said, the guy who originally broke the story on the Weaver allegations says there is much more out there that needs to come to light:
Stay tuned.
— Stacey Matthews has also written under the pseudonym “Sister Toldjah” and can be reached via Twitter. —
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